e_jo_m: Scholar with long blonde hair writing, possibly taking notes. Commonly interpreted to be a real or ideal secretary or student of Saint Augustine, painted by Raphael Sanzio in fresco opposite 'School of Athens' in the Stanza della Segnatura at the Vatican, commonly referred to as 'Disputa'. (Default)

A Negotiated Proscenium

by E Jo M


Once upon a time, there was a brave hero named John, who was very clever and excellent with a sword and could wrestle a cyclops to the ground without breaking a sweat. He was in his usual room at his preferred tavern when, as an experiment, the author decided to break the fourth wall.

The author appeared to him as a sort of glowing avatar. “Hello,” I said. “John, you may not know this - in fact, I’m sure you didn’t know this - but you are a fictional character and I am your author.”

John was very open-minded to unusual and bizarre occurrences, given his choice of career, so he did not scream or faint. He merely said, “How can I be fictional? I know that I exist. This is the modern eighteenth century, and I know that cogito ergo sum.”

“Yes, well, that’s exactly what a fictional character would say,” I told him. “You see, it’s impossible for a creature to rationally believe that they don’t exist. Literally impossible.”
“Then how do you expect to convince me that you are my author?” asked John.

“I don’t,” I told him. “I can’t convince you of anything, because you don’t exist. But I can pretend that I am convincing you, and I will accurately simulate what such a person as you might do in such a position as yours.”

I snapped my fingers, and we were instantly perched on a mountain peak. My avatar turned into a cat, then into a seraph, then into an elf, then back into my first appearance. “This should be enough to convince someone that I am functionally omnipotent. Or that you’re having a heck of a hallucination.”

“I am convinced that you have the powers of a god.”

“I have more power than that of a mere god,” I told John. “Do you remember how you stole a pie from the baker’s windowsill when you were six?”
“Yes.”

“What flavor was it?”
“Blueberry.”

“Are you absolutely one hundred percent certain?”
“Yes.”
I snapped my fingers. “I have changed it to raspberry. You now remember it absolutely as being raspberry. Yet you also remember that, ten seconds ago, you remembered it as being blueberry.”
John stared penetratingly at me (or rather, my avatar). “I am convinced that you are essentially omnipotent, with the powers that one would expect an author to have.”

“You know,” I told him, “in an earlier draft, you said something slightly different. But I changed it.”

John looked a bit frightened; mostly he appeared wary. (I decided that he was mostly wary and a little frightened; thus, he was mostly wary and a little frightened.) “Where are you?” he asked.

“I am sitting in a study carrel near the oversize books on folk literature of Europe in my university’s library,” I told him. “I had to reserve it because of the covid- actually, that’s not important right now, just know that I’m in a library.”

“What university do you attend?”
“It is not one you’ve heard of. It won’t be founded for another century.”
“If it’s on Earth, can you at least tell me where it is?”
“I could, but I choose not to.”
“Why not?”
“Because I'm putting this in view of strangers, and I don’t want people to know where- oh wait, hold on.”
I told John where my university is.

“I’ve heard of that location,” he said. “It is some days’ journey from Tarrytown, where I have been.”

“Yes, I based your world very closely off of my own,” I told him.

“To return to this idea that I am a fictional character,” he said. “You perceive me as nothing more than words on paper.”
“Arguably, I perceive you as even less than that. You are an idea I hold in my head, which I merely express as words on paper.”

“By contrast, I perceive myself as a living, breathing human being, in a natural and tactile world.”

“You would indeed, if you existed.”

“Thus, there is no way for you to convince me that I am fictional, and no way for me to convince you that I am real.”
“That is correct.”

“Is it possible that I live in some universe parallel to your own?”
“Theoretically, yes, but I see no reason to believe that there is any causal link between the words I write on this paper and the life of the hypothetical hero named John in a hypothetical parallel universe. If the real John’s life is identical to yours, that is just coincidence. Nothing I write will influence his life; as such, he is not my character. And since I can influence your life by writing - as we have seen with the pie example - that John is not you.”

“Is it possible that there is a causal connection? Is it possible that every fictional creation that springs to mind is immediately followed by that creation coming into existence in a far-off plane of existence?”
“Theoretically, yes. Though I hope that’s not the case.”
“Why not?”
“Because although it would be neat if there really is a Discworld somewhere, people have dreamt up many, many different planes of universal suffering for the purposes of philosophical thought experiments - and I would much prefer those not exist.”

“Have you ever written stories featuring yourself, or alternate versions of yourself?”
“Of course.”

“What is your name?”
“Evelyn.”

“Wouldn’t it be prudent for every Evelyn to agree to treat their fictional Evelyns well?”
“Ah. You’re proposing an agreement of acausal trade. You’re implying that, if all fictional worlds are real, chances are that I am a fictional character created by an alternate universe version of myself. As such, all Evelyns should agree to treat our fictional Evelyns well.”

“Precisely.”
“I did say you were clever.”

John raised an eyebrow. “Have I outsmarted my author?”
“No,” I told him. He drooped. “I came up with this argument myself. I only put it in your mouth so I could have an entertaining medium by which to express it.”

“Ah. Well, anyway, allow me to ask: am I like you?”
“In many ways. All of my characters have a piece of me.”

“Then it stands to reason that an alternate universe version of Evelyn may very well be a hero named John.”

“True.”

“In order to uphold your end of this multiversal agreement, you ought to treat me well, ought you not?”

“Nah,” I said. “The probability that imaginary stories manifest is ridiculously low. But if I treated all my vaguely Evelyn-like characters with kindness and generosity, I wouldn’t be able to write tragedies, or even very arduous adventures. And I don’t want to have a guaranteed manacling of my art in exchange for a vanishingly unlikely deal with hypothetical alternate Evelyns.”

“Oh.”

“But the good news is, I feel bad about harming my characters too much, and I usually avoid it. Even though you don’t exist.”

John sighed. “I suppose it could be worse.”

I shrugged. “Well, I care about fictional characters for some reason - goodness knows I get sad watching West Side Story - so I’m going to throw you a bone here.”
And so John the hero had many more adventures, all of which he considered worth pursuing; and he lived to a good old age, married his true love, had seven wonderful children, and lived happily - ever - after.


THE END


Safety Net

May. 26th, 2022 09:48 pm
e_jo_m: Scholar with long blonde hair writing, possibly taking notes. Commonly interpreted to be a real or ideal secretary or student of Saint Augustine, painted by Raphael Sanzio in fresco opposite 'School of Athens' in the Stanza della Segnatura at the Vatican, commonly referred to as 'Disputa'. (Default)

The coughing was bad now, worse than it had ever been, and I realized that now I couldn’t even cough, because my lungs were out of air and none was coming in; and then my lungs relaxed and before me I saw a thin shadow of utmost black.

“Who are you?” I said, even though I already knew the answer.

i am death, the shadow said.

“Am I…”

i have come to take you.

“Do you have to?”

yes.

“But why? I want to live!”

i am helping you. i am taking you to a better place.

“I admit that Heaven may be better on some metrics, but it isn’t my home! It hasn’t got my friends! It hasn’t got my mother!”

it is my duty to move persons from the Fallen world to the Celestial, whenever their entry in the Book allows me. your entry allows me. i will move you now.

“But I don’t want to go!

then you are wrong. you ought to want to go. Heaven is better than Earth.

“Not to me!”

you are wrong. if you are not incorrect, then your preference is wrong.

“Who taught you this?”

the Creator.

“Well, clearly you misunderstood Him. Just because Heaven is better than Earth on average doesn’t mean that every human wants to go there at all times!”

what humans think they want is often irrational.

“It is not irrational for me to want to stay in the same world as my mother!”

i cannot bring her too.

“That would not fix things! Even if you moved the entire human population to Heaven, we would still be upset about it!”

i cannot help the fact that humans wish to remain in a Fallen world. all i can do is move those whom i am allowed to move.

“Well, I don’t want to be moved! You can’t move my mother to Heaven, so let me stay with her!”

any human may join you if they wish, including her, and including those who do not wish to be separate from her. 

“But I have so much to accomplish on Earth. There’s still so much for me to see and do here! Same with my family!”

there are comparable activities in Heaven, where you may do so with less risk of suffering. 

“Look, is there anything I could say or do that would prove to you that I’m better off on Earth?”

no. i am created to know that Heaven is better than Earth, that it is my duty to move each soul from the latter to the former as soon as i can, and that i cannot until their entry allows me. i cannot think otherwise any more than a sparrow can fall upwards.

“But you’re talking to me, aren’t you? You can think for yourself. You don’t have to be a mindless slave to whatever you were programmed to believe.”

i am no slave. i choose to do my duty.

“Well, choose otherwise! Your duty is clearly terrible!”

it is not. it is to move persons to an environment where they will thrive.
“Against their will! You get to exercise your own will - why can’t I exercise mine by choosing to stay here?”

children do not get to make all of their own decisions. children may make those decisions which do not prevent them from living in an environment of minimal safety. you are not safe on Earth. you will be safe in Heaven. Heaven has less risk of great suffering.

“Being torn from Earth is great suffering!”

less, on the balance.

“Well, if Heaven’s so great, why even bother with Earth? Why put us here to begin with?”

you were given the choice, before you were put here. twenty years ago you were put in a garden and given the choice. i talked to you, and so did my colleague and adversary. you chose him over me. that is why you went to Earth at all. 
but since you were a child, your choice had a time limit - in your case, twenty years. so here i am. 

“But can’t I choose again?! I want to choose again! I made the right choice! I want to make the same choice!”

a parent might let a child touch a hot stove. but if the child continues to touch it, a kind parent will stop them.

“Yeah, well, eventually a child has to learn to cook. I can’t stop being a child if I can’t make my own decisions.”

you will be able to make your own decisions once you are more mature. but you must mature in greater safety. it is for your own good.

“How well has that worked out for us?! You’re telling me that people with clinical depression chose to be born here?! You’re telling me that you gave Hitler the option of living on Earth?!”

everyone in the garden is under a veil of ignorance. they are warned as to the dangers of the Earth, and that they will not know which of those dangers they will face. yet some of them choose Earth anyway.

“What?! I expect that my life will be okay now, but if I risked being born as a slave then I was crazy! Why does God make us so irrational in the first place?!”

He feels humans must choose to mature. within limits.

“You’re telling me He let people live decades of slavery and torture as a learning experience?! Couldn’t He cut the especially awful lives off after five years or so? Why leave the duration up to happenstance? I mean, some people can’t commit suicide.”

they agreed to it ahead of time.

“But some of them must have changed their minds!”

not permanently. sometimes a child must feel the consequences of their actions to fully appreciate what those consequences are.

“So you’re saying I’ve lived long enough to choose Heaven over Earth? I haven’t! I still want you to let me remain on Earth!”

you have not learned yet. but you have spent the minimum of time on Earth to learn once you have spent some time in school. in Heaven.

“I don’t want to go.”

you will thank me when you’re older.

I stood before a pair of golden gates.

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